Malawi Secures Gains Against Polio, Strengthens Health Systems
Malawi is taking strategic steps to sustain its hard-won gains against polio and strengthen its broader health system after officially closing its reimported wild poliovirus outbreak. The country has made significant progress in:
– Polio Transition Planning: Malawi held a National Polio Transition Planning meeting to ensure the infrastructure built to eradicate polio continues to serve communities.
– Sustaining Gains*: The transition plan aims to protect polio assets, including trained personnel and disease surveillance systems, and integrate them into the national health system.
– Long-Term Resilience: Malawi’s plan supports national ownership of essential polio functions, including surveillance, immunization, and outbreak response.
Key Highlights:
– Malawi was certified free of indigenous wild poliovirus in 2020 but detected a reimported case in 2022.
– The country responded swiftly and successfully interrupted transmission by May 2024.
– The Polio Transition Plan will help secure critical capacities and align them with the Ministry of Health-led Immunization Programme.
Expert Insights
– Dr. Patrick Wataya Chirwa emphasized the need to strengthen Malawi’s ability to manage core functions nationally.
– Sarah Wanyoike highlighted the importance of integrating service delivery and strengthening surveillance across the board.
Next Steps:
– Malawi will focus on optimizing existing systems, integrating surveillance efforts, and building multisectoral collaboration.
– The country will require cross-cutting collaboration among government agencies, local health authorities, partners, and civil society.
Conclusion
Malawi’s National Polio Transition Plan is a blueprint for sustaining polio eradication efforts and advancing universal health coverage and equity. With support from WHO and partners, Malawi is committed to staying polio-free and healthier for generations to come.

